I have been trying to write a function which can convert a number from an unsigned long integer to a readable ASCII character string. this is what I have come up with, but I am receiving some very strange characters in return. Could the problem be that I am telling a char to = an unsigned long int, (cString[i] = product[i])?
void convertToString(unsigned long con) {
unsigned long product[10];
char cString[10];
const unsigned long begConvert = 10 ^ 10;
I wish to convert a character directly to a string for a top-secret project I'm working on. It needs to be portable across various machines with different sized Indians.
Code:
#include <stdio.h> int main(void) { const int i = 0x0041; const char *str_p = (char *) &i; }
[code]....
I want this to output an 'A', but I'm not sure this code will work on my friend's mom's S/360.
I'm having a problem converting part of a string to an integer.I used strtok to seperate my string and I have also a function for atoi but how to apply it to my strtok function.What i need is to change the char *years to an int.Have a look of what I got:
Code: int main() { char sentence[]="trade_#_2009_#_invest_#_DEALING"; char *word=strtok(sentence, "_#_"); char *year=strtok(NULL, "_#_");; // assigning NULL for previousely where it left off char *definition=strtok(NULL,"_#_"); char *synonyms=strtok(NULL,"_#_");
I'm just learning and C. Here is a code snippit from a program that will compile. It's function is to validate credit card numbers. I have an error I can't find though. the last print statement shows the conversion in reverse string (as integers). Here is the code:
int main (void) { char cn[17]; char *cardtype; int n0,n1,n2,n3,n4,n5,n6,n7,n8,n9,n10,n11,n12,n13,n14, n15; int s1,s2,s3,s4,s5,s6,s7,s8; int oddsum; int sum; int total; int validate; }
// prompts the user for a non-negative numbers (>= 0) // reads in the a number and checks // keeps re-prompting user if the input is invalid (negative)
[Code].....
How do I go about Populating the elements in the array created, I keep getting a compiler error on this vArr[i] = tmp_stream.str.at(i);
My intent was to convert the string variable for the year to an integer data type. The code compiles but now cannot run on my system. I'm not sure what's going as to what the program is displaying.
Objective: Prompt the user for two years. Print all Comedy movies that were released between those two years.
#include <iostream> #include <cstdlib> #include <string> #include <fstream> #include <cctype> using namespace std; struct Movie { string name;
So I'm trying to create a function that replaces any instance of a character in a string with another. So first I tried the replace() string member function:
#include "NewString.h" using namespace ...; int main()
[Code].....
Instead of replacing the the l's with y's it outputted a long string of y's. Also, NewString is derived from the string class (it's for the assignment). the header and whole implementation file, already tested.
I've also tried, instead, to use a for loop in ReplaceChar() but I need to overload the == operator and I don't know how I should exactly:
I want the == operator to test if the value in the char array is equal to target but I'm not sure how to pass in the position. I'm guessing the this pointer in ReplaceChar() is not the same as the one dereferenced in ==() because target is never replaced by entry in the string.
how to carry out the conversions. The assignment is the normal hex to octal and Quart (base 4) via bit munipulation which I have worked out myself. However, I have been trying all day to figure out how to read in a string such as H1234, or O4567. How to parse the input I can handle the remainder myself. I'm just stuck and I've tried for hours.
I wrote this code purely for educational purposes. It also learn more about how exactly things look in memory. code I have right now ( I will likely add more and change it in the future) .....
Im trying to swap the values of an integer and a character, however Im not sure where to insert the static_cast<type> part that I need for this to happen?
// Program to demonstrate a function template #include <iostream> using namespace std; // Interchanges the values of variable1 and variable2 template<class T> void swap_values(T& variable1, T& variable2)
I am making a text encrypter and I have to convert text into ASCII codes. I know how to convert a single character into ASCII -
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { cout<<"Text to ASCII converter"<<endl<<"Enter text to convert into ASCII - "; char text; //defining input type, which is single character
[Code] ....
Try it here - URL.....Is there any way to run a similar program, which converts a string with spaces into ASCII code?
The function uses a "for" loop to print the given character the number of times specified by the integer.
How can I make a for loop to do that?
So.. my code looks like this:
// cpp : Defines the entry point for the console application // #include "stdafx.h" #include <iostream> using namespace std; void printMyInteger(int myInteger, char myChar) {
[Code] ....
So.. here is my error:
Error1error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before ')'d:workspaceuniversity ools for games and animationworkshopsweek 6week 6week 6week 6.cpp101Week 6 Error2error C2143: syntax error : missing ';' before ')'d:workspaceuniversity ools for games and animationworkshopsweek 6week 6week 6week 6.cpp101Week 6 3IntelliSense: expected an expressiond:workspaceuniversity ools for games and animationworkshopsweek 6week 6week 6week 6.cpp107Week 6
I have a char *pch that points to an integer digit 1 or 2 or ... 9. To get the character that's 1 less, instead of converting to int, minus 1, then converting back to char, I tried (*pch -1) and that seemed to work. I suppose that's because the particular character encoding on my system is such that the digits are encoded in the same order and spacing as the integers they represent. So the question is does this "convenience" feature hold true for all character encoding systems?
I have to implant a code to convert any integer to its 2'complement. I have already finished the first and the second part, which was to convert the integer to its binary representation, then to invert each digit in the binary representation. The third part is to add 1 to the binary representation.
// the last step is to add 1 to the binary number int carryIn=0; int carryOut; for(itr= bainaryList.begin(); itr!= bainaryList.end(); itr++) { //start comparing the possibilities of the values in both lists if (((*itr)==0) && (carryIn== 0))
I'm expected to write a c program for this question :
Using these header files #include <stdio.h> #include <conio.h>
Question : Write a program that will prompt the user to enter an integer value and a character code to indicate whether they want to do a Kilogram to Pounds conversion (A) or a Pounds to Kilogram (B) conversion. Note that 1 kg = 2.2 pounds. The program should then do the necessary conversion indicated by the code and display the newly converted value to the screen.
I'm trying to read in two instances of date and time (from user input) into a string value (MM/DD/YY hh:mm). I need to be able to calculate the difference between the two in order to return how much time has elapsed from the first date/time to the second date/time.
What would be the most efficient way to go about obtaining said results?
I was thinking I need to convert each year, month, day, hour, and minutes into its own integer variable, after researching immensely online I'm still not sure how to convert from a string of characters to an integer.
I am trying to read an array values from Tmin.txt file. I take array size from user viz. number of raw & column and then, read the following data from Tmin.txt file which look like this:
20 40 20 25 30
20 30 40 20 25
20 40 20 25 30
20 30 40 20 25
30 40 40 30 40
I am using getline, and then converting it to int by using atoi. But my code is not working.
Code : // reading a text file #include <iostream> #include <fstream> #include <string> using namespace std;
convert a positive integer code into its english name equivalent for digit. A valid code is of size between four (4) to six (6) digits inclusive. A zero is not allowed in the code.
example : if the input is 234056 the output is : INVALID CODE (PRESENCE OF ZERO) if the input is 23456 the output is : TWO THREE FOUR FIVE SIX if the input is 9349 the output is : NINE THREE FOUR NINE if the input is 245 the output is : INVALID CODE (3 DIGITS) if the input is 2344567 the output is : INVALID CODE (7 DIGITS)
step 1 : input code step 2 : count the number of digits in the code step 3 : if there is a zero in the code, "INVALID CODE (PRESENCE OF ZERO)" go to step 4 step 4 : if number of digits is mode or equal than 4 and less or equal than 6, go to step 5 else display the following message "INVALID CODE (<number of digits> DIGITS) step 5 : call a function called digit_name to convert each digit into its equivalent english name. display the result step 6 : print the digits in reverse order eg; if input is 13453, reverse order is 35431